- CLUB PARADISE -: Robin Williams stars in this comedy about an ex-Chicago fireman who pours his entire pension and disability settlement into rejuvenating a rundown Caribbean island cottage. Also stars Peter O'Toole, Rick Moranis, Jimmy Cliff, Twiggy and the late Adolph Caesar. (PG-13)

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S T I L L S H O W I N G

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- ABOUT LAST NIGHT - 4 star s: Based upon the Obie Award-winning play, "Sexual Perversity in Chicago," this funny, well-written screen adaptation relates honestly to relationships and the singles scene. Strong performances by Rob Lowe and Demi Moore, as two people trying to build a love affair out of a one night stand, as well as Jim Belushi and Elizabeth Perkins. (R)

- BACK TO SCHOOL - 2 stars: Rodney Dangerfield as a self-made millionaire who joins his son back at college. Fans of Dangerfield will love the movie, since the humor in this comedy is almost all Dangerfield-type one-liners. Also stars Sally Kellerman and Ned Beatty. (PG-13)

- BIG TROUBLE IN LITTLE CHINA - 2 stars: There's all kinds of trouble here; a problematic movie that you will either love or hate. Kurt Russell stars in this "Indiana Jones/ "Romancing the Stone"/"Ghostbusters" clone about the imaginary world under Chinatown. Comes with a plot as confusing as a Chinese restaurant menu. (PG-13)

- COBRA - 2 1/2 stars: Sylvester Stallone plays a one-man police force who shoots first, second and third and doesn't bother to ask questions. It's as if Rambo retired from military duty and put on a detective's plain clothes. (R)

- FERRIS BUELLER'S DAY OFF - 3 1/2 stars: Matthew Broderick as a sophisticated, upscale high-school senior playing high-tech hookey for one glorious day in Chicago. An exuberant delight by John Hughes, recalling his "Sixteen Candles." (PG-13)

- GHOSTBUSTERS - 3 stars: Who you gonna call? How about Bill Murray, Dan Aykroyd and Harold Ramis in this madcap send-up of the horror film genre. They play parapsychologists intent on ridding New York and, specifically Sigourney Weaver's apartment, of poltergeists. (PG)

- KARATE KID, PART II - 1 1/2 stars: Young Ralph Macchio and his sage mentor in the martial arts - and life - Noriyuki "Pat" Morita go to the latter's homeland of Okinawa to meet further adventures stemming from his past in this not terribly gripping sequel. (PG)

- LABYRINTH - 2 stars: There are lots of adventures filled with Monty Pythonesque humor, clearly the stamp of former MP member Terry Jones. But essentially, "Labyrinth" is David Bowie and scary monsters. (PG)

- LEGEND - 1 1/2 stars: Visually beautiful, but vapid and tiresome Ridley Scott venture into fairyland, with hero Tom Cruise and heroine Mia Sara, plus a pair of unicorns and many elves doing battle with grimly Satanic Tim Curry. Cruise, at least, looks as if he'd be a lot happier at a Texas barbecue. (PG)

- MY LITTLE PONY - 1 1/2 stars: This animated feature exists mostly to push Pretty Ponies, the popular children's toys. But under its insistent (and largely gentle) huckstering, it isn't a bad product. It certainly compares favorably with the grotesquely inept and violent swill that passes for animation on Saturday morning. (G)

- PSYCHO III - 3 stars: The Bates Motel is back in business as Anthony Perkins again portrays Norman Bates and makes his directorial debut in this, the second sequel to Hitchcock's 1960 masterpiece of terror and suspense. With its scenes of graphic violence and sexual humiliation, it's hard to call this entertainment. But it's a visceral, shocking experience. (R)